Why Written Feedback Is So Dangerous
Feedback is hard enough in person. Over email, it's a minefield. Without tone of voice, facial expressions, or the ability to adjust in real-time, even well-intentioned feedback can read as an attack.
The reader can't hear your supportive tone. They can't see your concerned expression. All they see are words on a screen — and the human brain interprets ambiguous written feedback as negative approximately 78% of the time. Your 'helpful suggestion' arrives as 'harsh criticism' in their inbox.
The templates below are engineered to survive the tone-stripping that email does to communication. They front-load safety, anchor to specific behaviors, and close with genuine support.
The 'Observation + Impact + Request' Template
Hi [Name], I noticed that [specific observable behavior — not interpretation]. The impact was [specific consequence — on you, the team, or the project]. Going forward, would you be open to [specific alternative behavior]? I think it would help with [positive outcome]. Happy to discuss — I know text can miss nuance. [Your name]
Example: 'I noticed that the client presentation included data from March instead of the updated April figures. The client flagged the discrepancy, which affected their confidence in our accuracy. Going forward, would you be open to doing a final data check the morning of client presentations? I think it would help us avoid these moments. Happy to discuss — I know text can miss nuance.'
Why this works: it describes behavior (not character), specifies impact (not judgment), and requests change (not demands it). The closing line invites conversation and acknowledges the limitations of the medium.
The 'I Want to Help You Succeed' Template
Use this when giving feedback to someone junior or someone you manage:
Hi [Name], I wanted to share some observations from [specific project/meeting]. [Specific positive thing they did well]. One area where I think there's an opportunity: [specific behavior and its impact]. I mention this because [genuine reason you care about their growth]. If it would help, I can [specific offer of support]. [Your name]
Leading with something genuine they did well isn't a 'feedback sandwich.' It's context. It tells the reader 'I'm paying attention to your whole performance, not just hunting for problems.' The key: the positive observation must be real and specific, not a throwaway compliment.
Feedback You Should NEVER Give Over Email
Some feedback requires a face-to-face conversation or at minimum a video call. Never deliver these over email: performance concerns that could affect someone's job, feedback about interpersonal behavior or emotional regulation, anything you're feeling emotionally charged about, or feedback that requires extensive context or back-and-forth.
The rule: if the person might cry, get angry, or need to ask clarifying questions — don't use email. Pick up the phone. The efficiency of email isn't worth the relationship damage of delivering sensitive feedback through a medium that strips all humanity from your words.
If you must put it in writing (for documentation purposes), have the conversation first, then send a follow-up email summarizing what you discussed. This way the written record exists, but the human connection happened first.
Receiving Feedback Over Email
When you receive written feedback that stings: wait 24 hours before responding. Your first draft will be defensive. Your second draft (tomorrow) will be professional. The feedback might be unfair. It might be poorly worded. But responding from the sting guarantees escalation.
A simple response that works in almost every situation: 'Thanks for sharing this. I want to make sure I understand your perspective correctly — can we set up a quick call to discuss?' This acknowledges without agreeing, and moves the conversation to a medium where nuance can exist.
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